UPDATE 2 - Tensions rise in Paris protests, man injured
Violent groups vandalize street furniture, shops
CHANGES HEADLINE, DECK; ADDS MORE DETAILS
By Nur Asena Erturk
ANKARA (AA) - Tensions rose in Paris during the protests against the government's pension reform on Thursday.
This is the 12th round since January, with hundreds of thousands of workers walking out and millions rallying.
The government and President Emmanuel Macron are not willing to back-pedal on the pension reform, and the Constitutional Council will achieve examining the bill on Friday.
Violent groups infiltrated the rally, as they did in the previous rounds, and vandalized street furniture and windows of shops, according to Anadolu correspondent on the ground.
Clashes erupted between those groups and police officers, and a man got injured in the head.
Police used tear gas to intervene while various projectiles were thrown at them.
Protests were held in other cities as well, including Lyon, Nantes, and Marseille.
A group of protesting workers, members of the SudRail trade union entered the premises of the multinational luxury goods conglomerate LVMH in Paris, the daily Le Figaro said.
They started to chant and did a peaceful protest without causing any damage, the same source added.
This was a symbolic action targeting wealth as LVMH's founder and CEO Bernard Arnault is currently the wealthiest man in the world, it also said.
The government unveiled the reform project in January and parliament started debating it the following month.
Workers and trade unions have expressed growing outrage by holding demonstrations and walkouts against the reform, which includes raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 by 2030, and requiring at least 43 years of work to be eligible for a full pension.
Political and social tension rose on March 16 when Macron and Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne decided to use special constitutional powers to force the plan through without parliamentary approval.
When the protests turned violent after that decision, police were accused of making arbitrary arrests and using force disproportionately.
*Umit Donmez in Paris contributed to this story
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